“They’re just keeping that due-date absolutely secret,” Foster says. “All of the betting, though, is on Tuesday or Wednesday next week.”

But there is new information on the royal baby’s possible title, though the name will not be revealed until after the birth.

"So once you have the name, for example, if it’s a girl, if it’s Charlotte,” Foster says, “the title will be 'Her Royal Highness, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge.'”

Foster also has details on all the baby products hitting the shelves as businesses commemorate the occassion.

Children's tableware, a royal guardsman outfit, bibs with the words "I love my Uncle Harry" and "I love my Auntie Pippa" are among them, but the most extraordinary piece–"a potty with royal credentials."

Follow along at CNN.com for your complete coverage of Britain's royal baby.

People are just coming to terms with the devastation as the death toll rises in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, the Canadian town that was partially leveled when a runaway train carrying crude oil exploded over the weekend. Thirteen people are confirmed dead and dozens are missing.

Local officials have been blunt about what this kind of explosion would have meant for victims and warned the death toll would rise, reports Newton.

For those that are missing, forensic specialist asked victims' families for hair samples, clothing, anything to help identify loved ones.

"The homes here are always very very close to the tracks, it's always been that way," reports Newton on the trains. "Usually they're travelling between 5 and 10 miles and hour, on that night, this train was going at least between 30 and 40 miles an hour."

Police say they aren't ruling anything out, including sabotage. The big question now though – in Canada and in the U.S. – is transporting crude oil safe?